By Noah Rothman
Friday, June 13, 2025
It hasn’t even been two weeks since the Ukrainians pulled
off a defensive operation of such magisterial competence that it could only be compared with
the feats achieved by Israel’s special forces. Well, today, it looks like the
Israelis have done something so adroit that the closest precedent is the one
set by the Ukrainians.
Israel’s initial strikes on Iranian military and nuclear
targets have made the weaponized pager operation against Hezbollah terrorists
look like child’s play. Acting in simultaneous concert with the hundreds of
Israeli aircraft that executed dozens of strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities,
Israeli intelligence and special forces on the ground inside Iran disabled the
country’s air defense systems. The operation reportedly relied on the use of
drones and missiles launched from inside Iran. One Israeli source told N12 that they had “establish a covert drone base ‘in
the heart of Iran,’ to neutralize Iranian air defenses and create other
critical effects to kick off the long-awaited campaign.”
Accurate damage assessments from the first waves of
Israeli strikes may take time to assemble, and Jerusalem maintains that this is
only the outset of a campaign that could take days or weeks before it
concludes. But early reports indicate significant success.
Israel has so thoroughly penetrated the Iranian security
and intelligence establishment that it was able to target and neutralize much
of Iran’s military and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps leadership within the
first minutes of the operation. Much of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, including Tehran’s primary
uranium-enrichment complex at Natanz,
appears to have been disabled. Israel appears to have avoided targeting the
regime’s political leadership, although the precision with which it dispatched IRGC and army commanders suggests it might have
and still could — a fact of which the mullahs are surely aware.
The utter collapse of Iranian air defense has allowed
Israeli kinetic strikes to continue all but unmolested. Almost every piece of
ordnance Iran put in the air overnight aimed at Israel was intercepted. Mossad agents are still likely operating
actively on the ground in Iran, sabotaging critical infrastructure and
destabilizing the regime from within. Iran’s decimated terrorist proxies in the
region cannot or simply will
not mount a response, and the Iranian armed forces have been decapitated.
There can be no coordinated reaction until their chain of command is
reestablished. And this was just day one.
At the outset of this campaign, the
Trump administration stressed that it played no direct role in it. Indeed,
it adopted the good-cop posture, insisting that it just couldn’t restrain
Israel any longer and, all things being equal, it would be better served making
a deal with Washington. But that posture was misleading. “Two Israeli officials
claimed to Axios that Trump and his aides were only pretending to oppose
an Israeli attack in public — and didn’t express opposition in private,” Axios
reporter Barak Ravid revealed. Netanyahu’s aides maintain that any
appearance of distance between Washington and Jerusalem was only a ruse. This
was the plan all along.
The U.S. side will not confirm the Israeli
characterization of events, but Trump’s
reaction to the overnight attacks on Iranian targets does appear to
substantiate their claims. The president deserves credit for refusing to
succumb to the Western temptation to languish in tormented apprehension anytime
an American ally achieves a military success. Israel’s efforts to disable the
Iranian nuclear program advance American interests — an Iranian bomb would threaten and complicate U.S. security, too. But the muted
response to Israeli actions in London, Paris, and Berlin suggests that Western
Europe is on board with this operation as well.
Enthusiasm for Israel’s actions is absent only among the
usual cast of spineless paper-pushers, global malefactors, and those who see
any display of Western muscularity as hideously provocative. Senator Rand
Paul launched into an instinctual dirge in which he lamented the degree to
which the hated “Neocons” are dragging the United States into a war with Iran —
the lack of a U.S. war with Iran apparently notwithstanding. Top Eurocrat Ursula
von der Leyen tore at her garments. “Europe urges all parties to exercise
maximum restraint,” she wrote, despite the absence of a European consensus,
“de-escalate immediately and refrain from retaliation.” Moscow, which already
lost one vassal regime in the Middle East to Israeli action, condemned
Jerusalem’s “unprovoked aggression” against Iran.
“Unprovoked”? Really? Israel has warned the world that
this day was coming for a decade. It was attacked on 10/7 by the Iranian
terrorist proxies with which it is literally surrounded on nearly all sides.
Its successes in its defensive operations against those Iranian proxies begat
direct Iranian retaliation against the Israeli homeland not once but twice last
year. The Iranian regime has had every opportunity to climb down from the war
its proxies started, likely
with Tehran’s knowledge. It has remained committed to the course of action
that it had been warned time and time again would lead to this level of
violence. It chose to press on.
There is a long operation ahead of us — one that will go
on longer than it must if the United States refuses to contribute to offensive
operations. And it will be a fraught campaign. The Iranian playbook relies on
asymmetric tactics, including terroristic events inside Western countries like
the United States. Iran — not the United States — may broaden the scope of this
conflict by targeting U.S. positions in the Middle East, a sequence of events
that is certain to be inverted by the pathological skeptics of American
military power. Heightened vigilance will be necessary in the coming weeks.
But there can be no doubt today that Israel is a worthy
partner. Its actions are justified by any number of casus belli that no other
nation would be expected to just stoically endure. The work it is doing on the
ground and in the skies over Iran directly advances U.S. interests. Defanging
the Iranian regime, if successful, will contribute to a more stable and
peaceful status quo in the region.
The Israelis have many lessons to teach us, but foremost
among them is that there is no substitute for victory. Westerners have had it
beaten into them that there is no such thing, that all successes come at a
cost, and that the unintended consequences associated with battlefield
achievements are so undesirable that inaction is the most prudent course.
Thankfully, Israel is not beholden to that paralyzing misconception.
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